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INTRODUCTION TO COMPETITION POLICY AND COMPETITION LAW by Philippe Brusick.

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Presentation on theme: "INTRODUCTION TO COMPETITION POLICY AND COMPETITION LAW by Philippe Brusick."— Presentation transcript:

1 INTRODUCTION TO COMPETITION POLICY AND COMPETITION LAW by Philippe Brusick

2 INDEX Competition policy and competition law Free-competition and unfair competition Free-competition and consumer protection Anti-competitive practices Competition law

3 COMPETITION POLICY Everything that can make our country/enterprises more competitive International competition/competitivity Comparative advantages Free-trade viz protectionism FDI or International loans-based development? Monopolies or free-competition? Administered prices/Subsidies or price liberalisation?

4 INCREASE COUNTRY- COMPETITIVITY By maximizing our enterprise competitivity Deciding which sectors to support? Subsidizing them (to the detriment of others)? Protect them from « unfair trade » such as dumping or export-subsidies? Encourage monopolies to make them internationally competitive?

5 INCREASE COUNTRY- COMPETITIVITY (Cont’d) Encourage private sector or public firms? Facilitate enterprise-creation? Encourage domestic monopolies or attract foreign investors? Attract FDI by offering tax- or other facilities?

6 HOW CAN ENTERPRISES BECOME MORE COMPETITIVE? 1.By betting on competitive advantages 2.By superior know-how 3.By R & D 4.Using anti-competitive practices? 5.Misleading or false-advertising 6.Cheating on weights & measures 7.Counterfeiting, industrial espionnage…

7 HOW CAN ENTERPRISES BECOME MORE COMPETITIVE? 1,2 &3 are honnest means of accruing competitivity 4,5,6 &7 are harmful practices, and 5,6 & 7 are illegal « unfair competition » practices, while 4 anti-competitive practices is proibited in many countries but not everywhere, and the harm on the economy as a whole is not well understood by all…

8 COMPETITION LAW Competition law focuses on anti- competitive practices such as: Horizontal and vertical agreements Abuses of dominant market power Mergers and acquisitions restraining competition

9 UNFAIR COMPETITION Misleading or false advertising Disparagement Cheating on weights and measures Counterfeiting Industrial espionnage Unfair trade (Dumping, Export subsidies, Currency manipulations, etc.)

10 ANTI-COMPETITIVE PRACTICES Cartel agreements (Price-fixing, market allocation, predation against outsiders) Abuse of dominant position of market power (A single firm able to fix prices and conditions without taking into acount competition, like a monopolist) Anti-competitive concentrations, resulting in a dominant position or a monopoly.

11 COMPETITION LAW Prohibits anti-competitive practices such as: Cartel agreements Collusive tendering Abuses of dominance Controls: Dominant firms and monopolies Mergers and acquisitions which might result in monopoly or dominant firms Establishes a Competition authority to ensure implementation of the law.

12 GLOBALISATION Deregulation of infrastructure sectors (Transport, telecoms, energy, banking) Privatisation of State monopolies Liberalisation of FDI Liberalisation of international trade Creation of Regional groupings of States

13 COMPETITION LAW IN THE WORLD All developed OECD countries have such laws Numerous transition economies including China have adopted such laws A rapidly growing number of developing countries in all continents as well.

14 COMPETITION LAW IN THE WORLD (Cont’d) Market-oriented economic reforms such as Trade and DFI Liberalisation and Privatisation need to be accompanied by competition law Many developing countries have privatised State monopolies creating private monopolies Many have opened their economy to FDI and Trade without having such laws.

15 DIFFICULTIES ENCOUNTERED IN THE APPLICATION OF COMPETITION LAWS Competition authority needs to be endowed with appropriate human and financial resources Government support is not always guaranteed The judiciary needs to be trained and reformed Relations with sectoral regulators must be clarified Consumers must be protected

16 CONCLUSION Members of Competition authority need training Tasks of competition authority viz those of regulators in the field of competition must be clarified Sectoral regulators need training in competition law and policy Need for specialised judges

17 CONCLUSION (End) Need for international cooperation (UNCTAD, OECD, World Bank) Bilateral, regional and sub-regional cooperation Multilateral trade negotiations (WTO) Regional trade negotiations Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs) with EC Effective role of NGOs (eg CUTS)

18 THANK YOU FOR YOUR YOUR ATTENTION philippe.brusick@gmail.com www.prbrusick.org


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